I'm not a professional coder. I'm an environmental consultant and I use a

I take it all back then...

No! No need to feel apologetic, the Python community works hard to be inclusive - which I take to include levels of expertise, not merely countering the various "-isms".


variety of tools depending on the project's requirements. Most every day I'm in emacs. use LyX for almost all writing, R and GRASS for data analyses, SQL
for database work, awk, sed, shell scripts, and python as required. This
means I'm constantly relearning what I forgot since the last time. This has
worked well for me for almost 30 years so I'm not complaining.

With that list, I'm having difficulty crediting your claim. It's good that you recognised programming as a tool, and made it work for you!


But now I am adding GUIs and other Real Application(TM) bits to postgres
applications I run from the command line for my own use so I can give these
tools to others who might benefit from them. The last database-backend
application I wrote in python2 and wxPython was more than a decade ago. Now
I'm working exclusively with Python3 and learning tkinter. I've much to
learn. ;-)

Know that feeling! I try to keep a note-/lab-/log-book of learning-experiences. Of course, remembering if/where I've noted topics is quite another matter...

The Python-list has gone a bit quiet. I imagine many are busy trying to encourage/support colleagues new to the work-from-home gig. (hopefully not any other reason!) Usually questions attract more, and more prompt, answers.

There are others who are tk-oriented. These days I (disclaiming bias) tend to follow the browser-based philosophy and thus web front-ends/HTML5-as-a-GUI (which don't need to be hosted on a web-server).

When introduced to Python GUIs (also wxPython), I found that following 'the bare minimum' rule (cf 'kitchen sink') was the better option. Indeed it was usually easier to add things later, than to try to remove components - which usually 'broke stuff' at an alarming rate.

"YAGNI" applies!

Plus, before you try to hide your computing skills under the proverbial bushel, one of our most active skilled members has recently faced a similar issue of trying to add GUI-usually functionality into a cmdLN app. So...


Thanks for the complete explanation and I hope your dinner didn't burn on
the grill.

OT:
the word "environment" may mean slightly (or not so slight) different things to different people/cultures. Over here it is almost synonymous with "conservation" and the tourist advertising of "Clean, green, New Zealand". Thus, I think if I started on a diet of our living-dinosaurs, the Conservation Department would, shall we say, take an apposite stance.

Given the time zone (it's already Friday here - would the rest of you please try to keep up with us!) I look-forward to my dinner...

Pleased to hear of your age-group - hopefully it enabled you to understand the humor (and more readily accept (grand-)dad-jokes!).

Perhaps of interest, here's a combination of the two - environment and (grand-)children: the New Zealand Geographic (magazine) is:-
<<<
Every day of this lock-down New Zealand Geographic will send a story or a video that can be shared among your family. The first one is below, and with it some talking points to fill our days at home together. If you’re a grandparent or a Kiwi overseas, you can participate too, and join your family discussion over phone or video conferencing.
>>>
https://www.nzgeo.com/newsletter/together-at-home/?t=34143_9db23c969a4ba2818c82d9b1c7f0ec9f&campaign_id=
--
Regards =dn
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